News Review and Commentary

SIXTH FORMS’ CASH CRISIS

7/18/2008 8:56:00 AM


TES 18 July

 Schools threaten to cut staff from under-16s to finance demand for places from older pupils

School sixth forms are facing serious funding shortfalls as the Government seeks to persuade pupils to stay in education beyond the age of 16, The TES can reveal. The Learning and Skills Council is funding only a 2 per cent rise in the number of teenagers staying at school beyond GCSE. But schools are predicting a 7 per cent rise, a difference many are warning could see sixth form places “rationed”. .
Deficits of more than £100,000 are being predicted in some sixth forms. Heads say it would be “immoral” not to provide teaching for students who want it. This looks likely to have a knock on effect for lower years at the schools affected as the pinch is felt at all levels. .
One secondary, Valley School in Worksop, Nottinghamshire, warns it may have to cut staffing for 11- to 16-year-olds because of a deficit of more than £100,000 in the budget of a sixth form centre it shares with another school. .Cox
Green School at Maidenhead, Berkshire, has a shortfall of more than £140,000, meaning that the college faces going into the red to pay for its popularity. Ian Hylan, the head, said: “This is a travesty. We are being encouraged to help youngsters expand their opportunities and we will not turn any student away: to do so would be immoral, given the work we do encouraging students to stay on.” .
Until 2007, the Learning and Skills Council (LSC) funded schools according to the previous year’s level. This year, schools are asked to estimate the numbers they expect in the sixth form for 2008-9. .Last year, numbers enrolled in school sixth forms rose by 7,000 to 377,500. This year, the schools predict a rise of 28,000 to 403,500, which the LSC believes is an overestimate. It is believed to be funding only an extra 6,500 places.
TES

Secondary | FE/HE/ Skills

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